After about four years of making do I broke down and bought a chair at one of those big box office stores. A high-back office chair looked so professional that I went with that style. I couldn't afford a leather chair like my dad had, so I went with a fabric-covered chair. I thought I'd really improved my seating arrangement. I had softened the seat, but I wasn't any more comfortable than I had been before. Sure I now had a swivel chair -- unlike any of my dining room chairs that I'd used, but the first one just didn't fit me. I have now been through more chairs I could almost start my own office chair store!

It all started in Central Park on June 22, 1901, when a group of people spotted rows of bright green rocking chairs along the park's mall, near the casino. Usually in this same spot, stood rows of uncomfortable wooden hard benches, so it was a pleasure indeed for the park-goes to sit and rock and enjoy the wondrous summer day.

Initially, the integration of bean bag furniture in the game play area of the home was a decorative measure used to bring back the classic "Retro" gaming style. The beanbag chair has been used for many decades. The beanbag chair is considered to be both practical and stylish. Little did these individuals know that the beanbag chair is also considered to be the healthy choice when it comes to video game furniture. While they were once filled with foam beads, most bean bag furniture companies have begun using shredded memory foam inserted to maintain the shape of the beanbag chair. With this change, the bean bag furniture does not lose its shape or support and stays comfortable. Gaming chairs do not have that kind of composition, making them harder to the touch than the beanbag chair. Gamers usually get lost in their video games and play for hours on end. After a long enough time doing that in a hard chair, it can wreak havoc on ones lumbar system. However, bean bag furniture does not result in pressure to the lumbar system.